Coins of Yesteryear, Set of 6, What's it Worth?

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Dylan Harwood, Sep 29, 2017.

  1. Dylan Harwood

    Dylan Harwood New Member

    Hi everyone,

    I've searched all over for these online and haven't even found another picture of the set, so I was hoping you all might be able to help!

    I'm attaching pictures to help.

    Thank you! photo_2017-09-29_17-53-16 (3).jpg photo_2017-09-29_17-53-15 (2).jpg photo_2017-09-29_17-53-18.jpg photo_2017-09-29_17-53-16 (4).jpg
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Dougmeister

    Dougmeister Well-Known Member

    I defer to the experts, but they appear to be common dates and circulated condition, so slightly more than melt for the silver (dime, quarter, half, and dollar) and a little bit for the Buffalo nickel and the Indian Head cent?
     
  4. ddddd

    ddddd Member

    These "yesteryear" sets are privately made (usually put together by the TV or magazine coin sellers) and come with different types of coins. The holders also have different designs and/or shapes. The value tends to be in the individual coins (the set as a whole does not carry much of a premium). Most of the time you will find common dates in circulated (often heavily circulated) condition. However, I have seen some better dates used (nothing super rare, but it's possible to find coins worth more than a few dollars or above silver value). Take a look at each coin and research sold prices for it on ebay (in similar condition).
     
    Santinidollar likes this.
  5. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    $23 to $25 in silver. The Morgan dollar is probably worth a little more than just the silver value. What year is the cent?
     
  6. Dylan Harwood

    Dylan Harwood New Member

    The cent is 1908. Thanks for the info!
     
    ddddd likes this.
  7. Dylan Harwood

    Dylan Harwood New Member

    Thank you both for your replies and the info!
     
    ddddd likes this.
  8. ddddd

    ddddd Member

    Check the reverse to make sure there is no "S" mintmark. If there isn't, it's a common coin.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page